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More than 80 high school football players, mainly quarterbacks, were on hand Saturday for the start of the two-day Air 7 Quarterback University camp at Dormont Memorial Stadium. It was third of eight scheduled camps this year. Here is a sampling of the players in attendance:
Player
School
Cl.
Ht.
Wt.
Matt Barkley
Mater Dei (Calif.)
Soph.
6-2
222
MarQueis Gray
Indianapolis Ben Davis
Jr.
6-4
213
Nolan Kearney
Downingtown West
Jr.
6-4
225
Tyler Porco
Peters Twp.
Jr.
6-3
210
Terrelle Pryor
Jeannette
Jr.
6-6
230
Tommy Reamon Jr.
Newport News (Va.) Gloucester
Jr.
6-2
195
“These types of things are great for kids, because you build a great foundation,” Dorsey said. “To be able to have someone experienced with the fundamentals teach that is really important, especially with quarterbacks. If you’re not correct, fundamentally, you’re kind of behind the 8-ball already. It’s amazing how something as little as just a step in your throwing motion or your footwork can really change the accuracy on a football.” With a price tag of $800, not everyone can afford the camp, though. “When I was a kid, I wanted to go to a camp, but I couldn’t afford to go,” said Tommy Reamon, a former World Football League MVP and Steelers draft choice in 1975 out of the University of Missouri. Reamon, whose son, Tommy Jr., is a top-rated quarterback in Virginia, where he plays for his father at Newport News Gloucester, gave a thumbs-up as he watched his son go through some drills. “I said if I ever made pro football, I would start a camp, and I did,” said the elder Reamon, who played one season in the NFL with the Kansas City Chiefs. “Franco Harris, Joe Greene, Joe Theismann, they all came to it in the late ’70s. So, I am a camp guy for what it tries to teach these kids in a positive and motivating way. It’s critical that you surround it with good people. I have positive things to say about it, but not everybody can afford it.” At Gloucester, Reamon also has coached such NFL-bound quarterbacks as Michael Vick and Aaron Brooks and former Virginia Tech quarterback Marcus Vick. Elsewhere in attendance, Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Montana and actor/musician Will Smith brought sons to the camp, both from California. The fathers kept a low profile, with Montana and his wife sitting quietly against a fence, at times videotaping, and Smith chatting with Dorsey for an extended time before the start of the camp and also entertaining questions from others in the crowd throughout. “Things like this provide a really good experience for kids and a great base for them to grow,” Dorsey said. “Even if you have an experienced coach, it never hurts to have another set of eyes. Someone might see what someone else isn’t seeing.”
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